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Hindawi Publishing Corporation
Applied Computational Intelligence and Soft Computing
Volume 2013, Article ID 863146, 12 pages
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/863146
Research Article
Subspace Clustering of High-Dimensional Data:
An Evolutionary Approach
Singh Vijendra1 and Sahoo Laxman2
1
Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Faculty of Engineering and Technology, Mody Institute of Technology and Science,
Lakshmangarh, Rajasthan 332311, India
2
School of Computer Engineering, KIIT University, Bhubaneswar 751024, India
Correspondence should be addressed to Singh Vijendra; [email protected]
Received 21 August 2013; Revised 20 October 2013; Accepted 11 November 2013
Academic Editor: Sebastian Ventura
Copyright © 2013 S. Vijendra and S. Laxman. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution
License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly
cited.
Clustering high-dimensional data has been a major challenge due to the inherent sparsity of the points. Most existing clustering
algorithms become substantially inefficient if the required similarity measure is computed between data points in the fulldimensional space. In this paper, we have presented a robust multi objective subspace clustering (MOSCL) algorithm for the
challenging problem of high-dimensional clustering. The first phase of MOSCL performs subspace relevance analysis by detecting
dense and sparse regions with their locations in data set. After detection of dense regions it eliminates outliers. MOSCL discovers
subspaces in dense regions of data set and produces subspace clusters. In thorough experiments on synthetic and real-world data
sets, we demonstrate that MOSCL for subspace clustering is superior to PROCLUS clustering algorithm. Additionally we investigate
the effects of first phase for detecting dense regions on the results of subspace clustering. Our results indicate that removing outliers
improves the accuracy of subspace clustering. The clustering results are validated by clustering error (CE) distance on various data
sets. MOSCL can discover the clusters in all subspaces with high quality, and the efficiency of MOSCL outperforms PROCLUS.
1. Introduction
Clustering problem concerns the discovery of homogeneous
groups of data according to a certain similarity measure. The
task of clustering has been studied in statistics [1], machine
learning [2–4], bioinformatics [3, 5–7], and more recently in
databases [8–10]. Clustering algorithms finds a partition of
the points such that points within a cluster are more similar
to each other than to points in different clusters [11]. In traditional clustering each dimension is equally weighted when
computing the distance between points. Most of these algorithms perform well in clustering low-dimensional data sets
[12–15]. However, in higher dimensional feature spaces, their
performance and efficiency deteriorate to a greater extent due
to the high dimensionality [16]. Another difficulty we have
to face when dealing with clustering is the dimensionality
of data. In the clustering task, the overwhelming problem of
high dimensionality presents a dual aspect. First, the presence
of irrelevant attributes eliminates any hope on clustering
tendency, because such features cause the algorithm to search
for clusters where there is no existence of clusters. This also
happens with low-dimensional data, but the likelihood of
presence of irrelevant features and their number grow with
dimension. The second problem is the so-called “curse of
dimensionality.” For clustering this means that clusters do not
show across all attributes as they are hidden by irrelevant
attributes or blurred by noise. Clustering methods are typically either based on distances (like partitioning and hierarchical clustering) or on densities (like density-based methods). In [17] the authors study the effects of high dimensions
on the nearest neighbor 𝑑min (o) and the farthest neighbor
𝑑max (o) of an object 𝑜 in detail. They have proven the
following equation for different distributions:
∀𝜀 ≥ 0 :
lim 𝑃 (𝑑max(𝑜) < (1 + 𝜀) 𝑑min(𝑜) ) = 1.
dim → ∞
(1)
This statement formalizes that, with growing dimensionalities (dim), the distance to the nearest neighbor is nearly
2
equal to the distance to the farthest neighbor (distances
become more and more similar). Consequently, clustering
methods based on distance functions have problems to
extract meaningful patterns in high dimensional spaces as
they either cluster only one object (the nearest neighbor) or
nearly the complete data set (the farthest neighbor). Figure 1
shows that clusters are embedded in different subspaces of
high-dimensional data sets.
Densities also suffer from the curse of dimensionality. In
[18] the authors describe an effect of higher dimensions on
density distributions: 99% of the mass of a ten-dimensional
normal distribution is at points whose distance from the
origin is greater than 1.6. This effect is directly opposite in
lower dimensional spaces: 90% of the objects have a distance
of less than 1.6 SD from the origin regarding a one-dimensional distribution. Density-based clustering methods [19,
20] hence have problem to determine the density of a region
as the objects are scattered over the data space. Grid-based
methods [10, 21, 22] are capable of discovering cluster of any
shape and are also reasonably fast. However, none of these
methods address how to efficiently cluster very large data
sets that do not fit in memory. Furthermore, these methods
also only work well with input spaces with low to moderate
numbers of dimensions. As the dimensionality of the space
increases, grid-based methods face some serious problems.
The number of cells grows exponentially and finding adjacent
high-density cells to form clusters becomes prohibitively
expensive. Often, especially in high dimensional spaces, not
all dimensions are relevant—the data are bound along such
dimensions, to a given cluster. It is vital for a clustering
method to be able to detect clusters being embedded in
subspaces possibly formed by different combinations of
dimensions in different data localities.
These observations motivate our effort to propose a
novel subspace clustering algorithm called multiobjective
subspace cLustering (MOSCL) that efficiently clusters high
dimensional numerical data sets. The first phase of MOSCL
performs subspace relevance analysis by detecting dense and
sparse regions and their locations in data set. After detection
of dense regions it eliminates outliers. The discussion details
key aspects of the proposed MOSCL algorithm including representation scheme, maximization fitness functions,
and novel genetic operators. In thorough experiments on
synthetic and real world data sets, we demonstrate that
MOSCL for subspace clustering is superior to method such as
PROCLUS [23]. Additionally we investigate the effects of first
phase for detecting dense regions on the results of subspace
clustering. The performance measure of MOSCL is evaluated
by the clustering error (CE) distance [24]. It is an intuitive
way to compare clustering because it uses the proportion of
points which are clustered differently in generated subspace
clusters and real subspace clusters after optimal matching of
clusters.
The remainder of this paper is structured as follows.
In Section 2, we review some related work. Section 3
describes multiobjective subspace clustering. Section 3.1
presents preprocessing phase that detects dense regions and
sparse regions and removes outliers. Section 3.2 describes
the design concepts of Multi Objective Subspace CLustering
Applied Computational Intelligence and Soft Computing
2D cluster A
2D cluster B
x xx x
x
x
xx x
x x
x
x
x
x
x x xx x x x x
xx x
x x
x x xx x x
x
xx
x
x
1D cluster D
x
1D cluster C
(a)
Subspace cluster hierarchy
2D
cluster A
2D
cluster B
Level 2
1D
cluster D Level 1
1D
cluster C
(b)
Figure 1: An example of subspace clusters.
(MOSCL) algorithm. Section 4 presents experimental evaluation. Finally, we conclude in Section 5.
2. Related Work
The subspace algorithms can be divided in to two categories: partition-based subspace clustering algorithms and gridbased subspace algorithms. Partition-based algorithms partition the set of objects into mutually exclusive groups. Each
group along with the subset of dimensions shows the greatest
similarity known as a subspace cluster. Similar to the Kmeans method, most algorithms in this category define an
objective function to be minimized during the search. The
major difference between these methods and the K-means
algorithm is that here the objective functions are related to the
subspaces where each cluster resides in. CLIQUE (clustering
in quest) [25] is one of the first subspace algorithms that
attempt to find clusters within subspaces of the data set.
This algorithm combines density and grid-based clustering
and uses an APRIORI style technique to find clusterable
subspaces. It is difficult for CLIQUE to discover high-quality
clusters in all subspaces. This may be because the unit densities vary in different subspace cardinalities such as the
identification of the dense units in all subspaces by utilizing
an absolute unit density threshold. It may suffer from the
trade-off between precision and recall. SUBCLU (densityconnected subspace clustering) [26] overcomes the limitations of grid-based approaches like the dependence on the
positioning of the grids. Instead of using grids it uses densityconnected sets of DBSCAN [19] cluster model. SUBCLU is
based on a bottom-up, greedy algorithm to detect the densityconnected clusters in all subspaces of high-dimensional data.
However SUBCLU also suffers from the density divergence
problem. PROCLUS (projected clustering) [23], a typical
partition-based subspace clustering algorithm, searches for a
partition of the dataset into clusters together with the set of
dimensions on which each cluster is correlated. PROCLUS
is a variation of the k-medoid algorithm, in which the
number of clusters k and the average number of dimensions
of clusters l need to be specified before the running of
the algorithm. This algorithm also assumes that one data
point can be assigned to at most one subspace cluster or
classified as an outlier, while a dimension can belong to
multiple clusters. ORCLUS (arbitrarily oriented projected
CLUSter generation) [27] is a generalization from PROCLUS
Applied Computational Intelligence and Soft Computing
[23], which finds clusters in arbitrarily oriented subspaces.
ORCLUS finds projected clusters as a set of data points C
together with a set of orthogonal vectors such that these
data points are closely clustered in the defined subspace.
A limitation of these two approaches is that the process of
forming the locality is based on the full dimensionality of
the space. However, it is not useful to look for neighbors
in data sets with very low-dimensional projected clusters. In
addition, PROCLUS and ORCLUS require the user to provide
the average dimensionality of the subspace, which also is
very difficult to do in real-life applications. FIRES (Filter
refinement subspace clustering) [28] is a general framework
for efficient subspace clustering. It is generic in such a way
that it works with all kinds of clustering notions. CLICK (subspace cLusterIng of categorical data via maximal k-partite
cliques) [29] uses a novel formulation of categorical subspace
clusters, based on the notion of mining cliques in a k-partite
graph. It implements an efficient algorithm to mine k-partite
maximal cliques, which correspond to the clusters. COSA
(clustering objects on subsets of attribute) [30] formalizes the
subspace clustering problem as an optimization problem. The
algorithm returns with mutually exclusive subspace cluster
with each data point assigned to exactly one subspace cluster.
One dimension can belong to more than one subspace cluster.
However, the subspace in which each cluster is embedded is
not explicitly known from the algorithm. The FINDIT (fast
and intelligent subspace clustering algorithm using dimension voting) [31] algorithm, uses a dimension voting technique to find subspace clusters. Dimension oriented distance
is defined to measure the distance between points based
on not only the value information but also the dimension
information. DENCOS (density conscious subspace clustering) [32] tackles the density divergence problem; in this
algorithm, authors devise a novel subspace clustering model
to discover the clusters based on the relative region densities
in the subspaces, where the clusters are regarded as regions
whose densities are relatively high as compared to the region
densities in a subspace. Based on this idea, different density
thresholds are adaptively determined to discover the clusters
in different subspace cardinalities.
Grid based subspace clustering algorithms consider the
data matrix as a high-dimensional grid and the clustering
process as a search for dense regions in the grid. ENCLUS
(entropy based clustering) [33] uses entropy instead of density
and coverage as a heuristic to prune away uninteresting
subspaces. It finds correlated, high density and high coverage
subspaces using level wise search that is used in CLIQUE
[25]. However, this algorithm finds only subspaces within
which meaningful clusters exist, without explicitly finding the
actual clusters. A more significant modification of CLIQUE is
presented in MAFIA that extends the base units in CLIQUE
to utilize adaptive and variable-sized units in each dimension.
These variable-sized bins are taken as building blocks to
form units in higher subspaces. MAFIA [34] also utilizes
candidate generate-and-test scheme to generate candidate
dense units in higher subspaces, thus resulting in unavoidable
information overlapping in the clustering result. pMAFIA
(merging adaptive finite intervals and is more than a clique)
[35] proposes to use adaptive units instead of the rigid ones
3
used in CLIQUE [25]. Each dimension is partitioned into
windows of small size, and then adjacent windows having
similar distribution are merged to form larger windows.
However, in the CLIQUE the search complexity increases
exponentially as a function of the highest dimensionality of
the dense units. pMAFIA may have the difficulties in discovering clusters with high qualities in all subspace cardinalities. DOC (density-based optimal projective clustering) [36]
proposes a mathematical definition of an optimal projective
cluster along with a Monte Carlo algorithm to compute
approximations of such optimal projective clusters. DOC
tries different seeds and neighboring data points, in order
to find the cluster that optimizes the quality function. The
entire process is repeated to find other projected clusters. It
is clear that since DOC scans the entire data set repetitively,
its execution time is very high. O-Cluster (orthogonal partitioning clustering) [37] clustering method combines a novel
partitioning active sampling technique with an axis parallel
strategy to identify continuous areas of high density in the
input space. EWKM (entropy weighting 𝐾-means) algorithm
[38] is a new K-means type subspace clustering algorithm for
high-dimensional sparse data. This algorithm simultaneously
minimizes the within cluster dispersion and maximizes the
negative weight entropy in the clustering process.
3. Multiobjective Subspace Clustering
A genetic algorithm, a particular class of evolutionary algorithms, has been recognized to be well suited to multi-objective optimization problems. In our work, we employ multiobjective subspace clustering (MOSCL) algorithm for clustering data sets based on subspace approach. In this section,
we discuss important concepts of preprocessing phase and
design concepts of MOSCL.
3.1. Preprocessing Phase. The goal of preprocessing step is
to identify all dimensions in a data set which exhibit some
cluster structure by discovering dense regions and their location in each dimension [39]. By cluster structure we mean a
region that has a higher density of points than its surrounding
regions. Such dense region represents the one-dimensional
projection of some cluster. Hence, it is clear that, by detecting
dense regions in each dimension, we are able to discriminate between dimensions that are relevant to clusters and
irrelevant ones. The identified dimensions represent potential
candidates for relevant dimensions of the subspace clusters.
The irrelevant attributes contain noise/outliers and sparse
data points [23].
Let us first give some definitions. Let D be a data set of
n data points of dimensionality d. Let 𝐴 = {𝐴 1 , 𝐴 2 , . . . , 𝐴 𝑑 }
be the set of all attributes 𝐴 𝑖 of the data set D, and let 𝑆 =
{𝐴 1 × 𝐴 2 × ⋅ ⋅ ⋅ × 𝐴 𝑑 } be the corresponding d-dimensional
data space. Any k-dimensional subspace of 𝑆 ⊆ 𝐴 is the
space with the k dimensions drawn from the d attributes,
where 𝑘 ≤ 𝑑. The cardinality of the subspace is defined as
the number of dimensions forming this subspace. The input
consists of a set of d dimensional points 𝐷 = {𝑥1 , 𝑥2 , . . . , 𝑥𝑛 },
where 𝑥𝑖 = {𝑥𝑖1 , 𝑥𝑖2 , . . . , 𝑥𝑖𝑑 }. The projection of a point 𝑥𝑖 ∈ 𝐷
4
Applied Computational Intelligence and Soft Computing
into a subspace 𝑆 ⊆ 𝐴 is denoted by 𝜋𝑆 (𝑥𝑖 ). The distance
function between the data points D is denoted by dist. It
is assumed that dist is one of the Lp -norms. The k-nearest
neighbors of a data point 𝑥𝑖 for any 𝑘 ∈ 𝑁𝑁 are denoted by
𝑁𝑁𝑘 (𝑥𝑖 ). More formally, the set of k-nearest neighbors of a
data point 𝑥𝑖 is the smallest set 𝑁𝑁𝑘 (𝑥𝑖 ) ⊆ 𝐷 that contains at
least k data points from data set D. In order to detect densely
populated regions in each attribute we compute variance of
the local neighborhood of each data point by measuring the
variance of its k nearest neighbors [40]. The variance of local
neighborhood of data point 𝑥𝑖𝑗 (𝑖 = 1, . . . , 𝑛 and 𝑗 = 1, . . . , 𝑑)
is defined as
𝑗 2
𝜆 𝑖𝑗 =
∑𝑞∈𝑝𝑗𝑖 (𝑥𝑖𝑗 ) (𝑞 − 𝐶𝑖 )
𝑘+1
,
(2)
𝑗
where 𝑝𝑗𝑖 (𝑥𝑖𝑗 ) = {𝑛𝑛𝑘 (𝑥𝑖𝑗 ) ∪ 𝑥𝑖𝑗 } and |𝑝𝑗𝑖 (𝑥𝑖𝑗 )| = 𝑘 + 1. Here
𝑗
𝑛𝑛𝑘 (𝑥𝑖𝑗 ) denotes the set of 𝑘-nearest neighbors of 𝑥𝑖𝑗 in attrib𝑗
ute 𝐴 𝑗 and 𝐶𝑖 is the center of the set 𝑝𝑗𝑖 (𝑥𝑖𝑗 ); the center is
calculated as
𝑗
𝐶𝑖 =
∑𝑞∈𝑝𝑗𝑖 (𝑥𝑖𝑗 ) 𝑞
𝑘+1
.
(3)
A large value of 𝜆 𝑖𝑗 means that data point 𝑥𝑖𝑗 belongs to
a sparse region, while a small one indicates that it belongs
to a dense region. Calculation of the k nearest neighbors is
an expensive task, especially when the number of data points
n is very large. We can search the k nearest neighbors in an
efficient way by presorting the values in each attribute and
limiting the number of distance comparisons to a maximum
of 2k values. The major advantage of using the variance degree
is that it provides a relative measure on which the dense
regions are more easily distinguishable from sparse regions.
On the other hand, when a dimension contains only sparse
regions, all the estimated 𝜆 𝑖𝑗 for the same dimension tend
to be very large. Our objective now is to determine whether
or not dense regions are present in a dimension. In order to
identify dense regions in each dimension, we are interested in
all sets of 𝑥𝑖𝑗 having a small variance degree by a predefined
density threshold 𝜀 ∈ R. Therefore, setting 0 < 𝜀 ≤ 0.1 is a
reasonable choice. We have applied this density threshold for
estimation of binary weight 𝑧𝑖𝑗 of data point 𝑥𝑖𝑗 . If 𝜆 𝑖𝑗 < 𝜀,
then 𝑧𝑖𝑗 = 1 and 𝑥𝑖𝑗 belongs to a dense region; else 𝑧𝑖𝑗 = 0
and 𝑥𝑖𝑗 belongs to a sparse region. We obtain a binary matrix
𝑍(𝑛∗𝑑) which contains the information on whether each data
point falls in a dense region of an attribute. Table 1 shows
a binary matrix 𝑍(𝑛∗𝑑) which contains the information on
whether each data point falls in a dense region of an attribute
or sparse region. It is clear that the computation of 𝑧𝑖𝑗 depends
on the input parameters k and 𝜀 threshold. We set the value
of variance 𝜆 𝑖𝑗 ≤ 0.1, which indicates that data point 𝑥𝑖𝑗
belongs to a dense region. In practice, since the variance
degree 𝜆 𝑖𝑗 is the indicator for dense regions and its values vary
significantly depending on the attributes, first we normalize
all the 𝜆 𝑖𝑗 for each attribute Aj by mapping them onto the
interval [0, 1] before applying the threshold. In fact, the role
of the parameter k is intuitively easy to understand and it can
Table 1: Binary weight matrix 𝑍 of data points.
Data points
𝑥1
𝑥2
𝑥3
𝑥4
𝑥5
𝑥6
𝑥7
𝑥8
𝑥9
𝑥10
𝐴1
1
1
1
0
0
1
1
1
0
0
𝐴2
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
𝐴3
1
1
1
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
𝐴4
0
0
0
1
0
1
1
1
0
0
Attributes
𝐴5 𝐴6
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
𝐴7
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
𝐴8
1
1
1
1
0
1
1
1
1
1
𝐴9
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
0
0
𝐴 10
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
be set by the variance degrees 𝜆 𝑖𝑗 which are not meaningful
enough because few neighbors would have a distance close to
zero.
Obviously, the parameter k is related to the expected
minimum cluster size and should be much smaller than the
number of objects n in the data. To gain a clear idea of the
variance of the neighborhood of a point, we have chosen
𝑘 ≤ √𝑛 in this phase. In order to capture irrelevant attributes
and outliers, we used binary similarity coefficients to measure
the similarity between binary data points 𝑧𝑖 for (𝑖 = 1, . . . , 𝑛)
in the matrix 𝑍. One commonly used similarity measure for
binary data is the Jaccard coefficient [41]. This measure is
defined as the number of variables that are coded as 1 for both
states divided by the number of variables that are coded as 1
for either or both states. In preprocessing phase, we require
a similarity measure that can reflect the degree of overlap
between the binary data points 𝑧𝑖 in the identified dense
regions in the matrix 𝑍. Since dense regions are encoded by
1 in the matrix 𝑍, we believe that the Jaccard coefficient is
suitable for our task because it considers only matches on 1’s
to be important. The Jaccard coefficient is given as
sim (𝑧1 , 𝑧2 ) =
𝑎
,
𝑎+𝑏+𝑐
(4)
where a indicates the number of dimensions in which the
two objects have the same binary value of 1. Similarly, c
and b count the number of dimensions in which the two
objects have different binary values. The Jaccard coefficient
[41] has values between 0 and 1. A pair of points is considered
similar if the estimated Jaccard coefficient between them
exceeds a certain threshold 𝛼. We set the value of threshold
𝛼 equal to 0.8, for measuring degree of similarity between
two binary vectors in preprocessing phase. On the other
hand, it is clear that when all of the binary weights for a
binary data point 𝑧𝑖 in the matrix 𝑍 are equal to zero, the
related data point 𝑥𝑖 is systematically considered as an outlier
because it does not belong to any of the discovered dense
regions. The identified outliers |𝑜| are discarded from the data
set and their corresponding rows are eliminated from the
matrix. By eliminating outliers the size of the data set D is
reduced with size 𝑁𝑑 = 𝑛 − |𝑜| and now its new associated
matrix of binary weights 𝑈(𝑁𝑑 ∗𝑑) (see Table 2). MOSCL uses
Applied Computational Intelligence and Soft Computing
5
Table 2: Binary weight matrix 𝑈 of data points after removing
outliers.
Data points
𝑥1
𝑥2
𝑥3
𝑥4
𝑥6
𝑥7
𝑥8
𝑥9
𝑥10
𝐴1
1
1
1
0
1
1
1
0
0
𝐴2
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
1
𝐴3
1
1
1
0
1
1
1
1
1
Attributes
𝐴4 𝐴6 𝐴7
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
1
1
0
1
1
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
1
1
𝐴8
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
𝐴9
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
0
0
𝐴 10
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
1
1
these binary weights of the matrix 𝑈 for representation of
chromosomes. MOSCL uses a modified distance function
that considers contributions only from relevant dimensions
when computing the distance between a data point and the
cluster center. In concrete terms, we associate the binary
weights 𝑢𝑖𝑗 {𝑖 = 1, . . . , 𝑁𝑑 ; 𝑗 = 1, . . . , 𝑑} in matrix 𝑈 which
the Euclidean distance.
This makes the distance measure more effective because
the computation of distance is restricted to subsets where the
data point values are dense. Formally, the distance between a
point xi and the cluster center V𝑠 {𝑠 = 1, 2, . . . , 𝑁𝑐 } is defined
as
𝑑
2
dis(𝑥𝑖 , V𝑠 ) = √ ∑𝑢𝑖𝑗 (𝑥𝑖𝑗 − V𝑠𝑗 ) .
(5)
𝑗=1
3.2. Multiobjective Subspace Clustering Algorithm. In this
subsection, we will dwell on the important design issues of
MOSCL, including individual representation, fitness function, selection operator, search operator, and elitism. The
basic steps of MOSCL are presented in Procedure 1.
3.2.1. Representation. For any genetic algorithm, a chromosome representation is needed to describe each individual in
the population of interest [42]. The representation method
determines how the problem is structured in the algorithm
and the genetic operators that are used. Each chromosome
is made up of a sequence of genes from certain alphabet. An
alphabet can consist of binary digits (0 and 1), floating-point
numbers, integers, and symbols [43]. A straightforward yet
effective representation scheme for subspaces is the standard
binary encoding; all individuals are represented by binary
strings with fixed and equal length 𝜃, where 𝜃 is the number
of dimensions of the dataset. Using a binary alphabet set
𝐵 = {0, 1} for gene alleles, each bit in the individual will take
on the value of “0” and “1”, respectively, indicating whether
or not its corresponding attribute is selected (“0” indicates the
corresponding condition is absent and vice versa for “1”). As a
simple example, the individual 110101 when the dimension of
data stream 𝜃 = 6 represents a 4-dimensional subspace cluster
containing the 1st, 2nd, 4th, and 6th attributes of the dataset.
In our method, each chromosome is described by a sequence
of matrix 𝑀 = 𝑑 × 𝑆𝑐 , where d is the dimension of the feature
space and 𝑆𝑐 is the number of subspace clusters described
by the chromosome. That is to say, the chromosome of the
algorithm is written as when the first d values represent the
weights of d dimensions of the first subspace cluster, the next
d points represent the weights of second subspace cluster and
so on.
3.2.2. Objective Functions. In the single-objective optimization problem, the objective function and fitness function
are often identical and are usually used exchangeably [43].
Hence, quality evaluation of individuals in single-objective
optimization problems can be conducted directly based on
their objective function values. Single objective methods of
data clustering can be categorized based on the criterion they
optimize [44]. One group of clustering algorithms try to form
compact spherical clusters by minimizing the intracluster
distance between data points and cluster representatives, as
in 𝐾-means [12] average link agglomerative clustering [13]
and self-organizing maps [45]. Another group of clustering
algorithms tries to form clusters in which data items close to
each other fall into the same cluster, hence optimizing connectedness. This category of clustering algorithms can find
clusters of arbitrary shapes; however, they might fail when
clusters are close to each other. Two examples of this group of
clustering algorithms are the single link agglomerative clustering, since clustering algorithms with single criterion can
find one category of cluster shapes and fail on the other category. In contrast, the objective function and fitness function
differ in genetic multiobjective optimization. The objective
function f, by applying the decision vector 𝑅, produces a
k-dimensional objective vector S. MOSCL uses a multiobjective genetic algorithm during fitness evaluation including
multi objective functions for finding subspace clusters. First
objective measures the density of each subspace cluster 𝐶𝑠 .
On the other hand minimizing compactness tries to cluster
dataset in as many subspace clusters as possible. Therefore
the two objectives, density and compactness, can interact
towards making the semioptimal clustering solutions. The
mathematical definitions of the objectives of MOSCL are as
follows.
Let 𝐴 = {𝐴 1 , . . . , 𝐴 𝑑 } be set of d dimensional attributes.
We define the density of a single attribute 𝐴 𝑖 as the fraction
of “1” entries in the column 𝐴 𝑖 , denoted as dens(𝐴 𝑖 ). The
density of a subspace cluster 𝐶𝑠 denoted as dens(𝐶𝑠 ) is the
ratio between the number of data points contained in the
subspace cluster |𝐶𝑠 | and the total number of data points
in the dataset |𝐷|. We propose a weighted density measure,
which finds density of all subspace clusters. The weighted
density of a subspace cluster C𝑠 denoted as dens𝑤 (𝐶𝑠 ) is
defined as the ratio between dens(𝐶𝑠 ) and the average density
over all attributes contained in 𝐴; that is, dens𝑤 (𝐶𝑠 ) =
dens(𝐶𝑠 )/((1/|𝐴|)(∑𝐴 𝑖 ∈𝐴 dens(𝐴 𝑖 ))), where |𝐴| is the number
of attributes contained in subspace cluster. We call the
denominator (1/|𝐴|)(∑𝐴 𝑖 ∈𝐴 dens(𝐴 𝑖 )) weight. The second
objective is to minimize intracluster variance or compactness.
To measure the compactness between subspaces clustering,
we use the Euclidean distance in weighted form as the distance measure. In order to define weighted Euclidean distance
6
Applied Computational Intelligence and Soft Computing
Procedure: Multi Objective Subspace Clustering algorithm
Begin
Apply preprocessing phase on data set D
𝑆pop = initial population of relevant subspaces /∗ Popsize = |𝑃|∗ /
While (the termination criterion is not satisfied)
for i = 1 to |𝑃| // for each individual in subspace 𝑆pop
Randomly select chromosomes from the population
Call subspace update ( )
Compute objective functions for current chromosomes
Apply crossover operation with probability 𝑝𝑐
Apply mutation operator with mutation probability 𝑝𝑚
Compute objective functions for new offsprings
end for
end while
Select the best solution from population
End
Procedure subspace update ( )
Choose cluster centers {s = 1,. . ., 𝑁𝑐 } from data set generated
by preprocessing phase
Repeat
Compute the membership matrix 𝑀(𝑁𝑑 ∗𝑁𝑐 )
for i =1 to 𝑁𝑑 do
for j = 1 to 𝑁𝑐 do // 𝑁𝑐 —number of cluster centers
if dist(𝑥𝑖 , V𝑠 ) < dist(𝑥𝑖 , V𝑗 ) then
𝑚𝑖𝑗 = 0;
else
𝑚𝑖𝑗 = 1;
end if
end for
end for
Compute the cluster center:
𝑁
V𝑠1 =
∑𝑖=1𝑑 (𝑚𝑖𝑗 × 𝑢𝑖 × 𝑥𝑖 )
𝑁
∑𝑖=1𝑑 𝑚𝑖𝑗
(𝑗 = 1, . . . , 𝑁𝑐 );
Compute cluster weights 𝑢𝑖𝑗 encoded in each chromosome using
membership matrix 𝑀(𝑁𝑑 ∗𝑁𝑐 ) and cluster center V𝑠1
until convergence
Procedure 1: Steps of MOSCL algorithm.
for subspace clustering, the data points 𝑥𝑖 and V𝑠 can be
thought of as the projections 𝜋𝑆 (𝑥𝑖 ) and 𝜋𝑆 (V𝑠 ) in their own
subspace S. The equation of compactness is
𝑆 Comp (𝐶𝑠 )
1
󵄩
󵄩2
= 󵄨󵄨 󵄨󵄨 ∑ 󵄩󵄩󵄩(𝜋𝑆 (𝑥𝑖 ) − 𝜋𝑆 (V𝑠 ))󵄩󵄩󵄩
󵄨󵄨𝐶𝑠 󵄨󵄨 𝑥𝑖 ∈𝐶𝑠
(6)
𝑑
2
1
= 󵄨󵄨 󵄨󵄨 ∑ ∑ 𝑢𝑖𝑗 (𝑥𝑖𝑗 − V𝑠𝑗 ) ,
󵄨󵄨𝐶𝑠 󵄨󵄨 𝑥𝑖 ∈𝐶𝑠 𝑗=1
where 𝐶𝑠 is the subspace cluster and 𝑢𝑖𝑗 is binary weights
associated with each attribute. This makes the distance measure more effective because the computation of distance is
restricted to subsets where the object values are dense. Thus
by minimizing this objective we give higher fitness to compact subspace clusters.
3.2.3. Selection. The selection operator supports the choice of
the individuals from a population that will be allowed to mate
in order to create a new generation of individuals. Genetic
algorithm methods attempt to develop fitness methods and
elitism rules that find a set of optimal values quickly and
reliably [46]. But, ultimately, it is the selection method that
is responsible for the choice of a new generation of parents.
Thus, the selection process is responsible for making the mapping from the fitness values of the input population to a probability of selection and thus the probability of an individual’s
genetic material being passed to the next generation. Here
we adopt the tournament selection method [47] because its
time complexity is low. The basic concept of the tournament
Applied Computational Intelligence and Soft Computing
7
begin
for 𝑖 = 1 to 𝑃pop do
𝑃󸀠 best fitted item among N tour elements randomly
selected from P;
return 𝑃󸀠
end
Procedure 2: Procedure of tournament selection method.
method is as follows: randomly select a positive number N
tour of chromosomes from the population and copy the best
fitted item from them into an intermediate population. The
process is repeated P times, and here P is the population size.
The algorithm of tournament selection is shown in Procedure
2.
3.2.4. Crossover. Crossover is the feature of genetic algorithms that distinguishes it from other optimization techniques. As with other optimization techniques genetic algorithms must calculate a fitness value, select individuals for
permutation, and use mutation to prevent convergence on
local maxima. But, only genetic algorithms use crossover to
take some attributes from one parent and other attributes
from a second parent. We used the uniform crossover [48] in
the proposed algorithm. The uniform crossover is applied to
the genes of the chromosome, simultaneously. Two chromosomes are randomly selected as parents from the current
population. The crossover creates the offspring chromosome
on a bitwise basis, copying each allele from each parent with
a probability 𝑝𝑖 . The 𝑝𝑖 is a random real number uniformly
distributed in the interval [0, 1]. Let P1 and P2 be two parents,
and let C1 and C2 be offspring chromosomes; the 𝑖th allele in
each offspring is defined as.
𝐶1 (𝑖) = 𝑃1 (𝑖) ,
𝐶2 (𝑖) = 𝑃2 (𝑖)
if 𝑝𝑖 ≥ 0.5,
𝐶1 (𝑖) = 𝑃2 (𝑖) ,
𝐶2 (𝑖) = 𝑃1 (𝑖)
if 𝑝𝑖 < 0.5.
(7)
For example chromosome 𝑃𝑖 and chromosome 𝑃𝑗 are
selected for uniform crossover as follows:
𝑃𝑖 = 101010,
𝑃𝑗 = 010101.
𝐶𝑗 = 110011.
∧
𝑝 = 𝑝 ± 𝑁 (0, 𝜎) × 𝑝,
(10)
where ∧ 𝑝 is the mutated gene, 𝑝 is the existing gene value,
and 𝑁(0, 𝜎) is a normally distributed random number with
mean 0 and standard deviation (𝜎). After some trial and error
procedures, we find that when (𝜎) is equal to 0.1.
3.2.6. Elitism. When creating a new population by crossover
and mutation, we have a high chance to lose the best subspace
clusters found in the previous generation due to the nature of
randomness of evolution [50]. Hence, besides Pareto-based
selection method, we also use elitism method to achieve a
constantly improving population of subspace clusters. We
adopt the archive fashion to implement elitism in MOSCL.
In our elitism strategy, the best or a few best subspaces are
directly copied to the new population, together with other
new individuals generated from the mating pool. In addition,
all the solutions obtained in MOSCL in different generations
will be stored in an external archive. In the current implementation of MOSCL, there is no limit on the archive that is used
to store all the solutions that are obtained in the MOSCL.
4. Experimental Evaluation
(8)
The random number 𝑝𝑖 is generated for crossover [0.3,
0.7, 0.80.4, 0.2, 0.5]. Now copy each allele from each parent
with a probability 𝑝𝑖 as discussed in the uniform crossover
operation. The resulting offsprings are
𝐶𝑖 = 001100,
probability of being applied to each individual. Therefore,
some individuals may be mutated by several mutation methods, some individuals may be mutated by a single mutation
method, and some individuals may not be mutated at all. Here
we apply bit mutation to the genes [48]. This results in some
bits in genes of the children being reversed: “1” is changed to
“0” and “0” is changed to “1”. The gene values are modified as
follows:
(9)
3.2.5. Mutation. Unlike the crossover and selection operators, mutation is not necessarily applied to all individuals
[49]. Multiple mutation specifications are available: bit, uniform, and normal. Each mutation type has an independent
The experiments reported in this section used a 2.0 GHz
core 2 duo processors with 2 GB of memory. After data
preparation has been finished, we can conduct an experimental evaluation on MOSCL and compare the performance
of MOSCL with other competitive methods. We use both
synthetic and real-life datasets for performance evaluation in
our experiments. There are four major parameters that are
used in the MOSCL, that is, the total number of generations
that are to be performed in the MOSCL (denoted by 𝑛𝑔 ), the
number of individuals in the population of each generation
(denoted by 𝑛𝑝 ), the probability that the crossover between
two selected individuals will be performed (denoted by 𝑝𝑐 ),
and finally the probability that each bit of the individual will
be mutated (denoted by 𝑝𝑚 ). The typical parameter setup in
MOSCL is 𝑛𝑔 = 100, 𝑛𝑝 = 50, 𝑝𝑐 = 0.8, and 𝑝𝑚 = 0.1. One can
8
Applied Computational Intelligence and Soft Computing
change the value specification of these parameters in order to
obtain different search workloads and search strengths for the
MOSCL.
4.1. Performance Measure. The performance measure used in
MOSCL is the clustering error (CE) distance [24] for subspace
clustering. It is an intuitive way to compare clustering because
it uses the proportion of points which are clustered differently
in generated subspace clusters and real subspace clusters
after optimal matching of clusters. In other words, it is the
scaled sum of the nondiagonal elements of the confusion
matrix, minimized over all possible permutations of rows and
columns. The CE distance has been shown to be the most
desirable metric for measuring agreement between partitions
in the context of projected/subspace clustering [24].
Let us have two subspace clusters: GS = {𝐶1 , 𝐶2 , 𝐶3 , 𝐶𝑁𝑐 }
is a collection of experimental generated projected subspace
󸀠
} is a collection of real
clusters and RS = {𝐶1󸀠 , 𝐶2󸀠 , 𝐶3󸀠 , . . . , 𝐶𝑁𝑐
subspace clusters. In order to construct a clustering error
distance measure for subspace clusters, we need to define the
union, and the intersection of subspace clusters in GS and RS.
We denote the union of two subspace clusters GS and RS as
∪ = ∪ (GS, RS) = sup (GS) ∪ sup (RS) ,
(11)
where sup(GS) and sup(RS) are the support of subspace
clustering GS and RS. The support of RS is defined as
sup(GS) = ∪𝑠=1,...𝑛 sup(𝐶𝑠 ), where sup(𝐶𝑠 ) is support of subspace cluster Cs , given by sup(𝐶𝑠 ) = {𝑥𝑖𝑗 | 𝑥𝑖 ∈ 𝐷𝑆 ∧ 𝐴 𝑗 ∈
𝐴𝑆}. The DS is a subset of data points of D, and AS is a
subset of dimensions of A. Let 𝑀 = (𝑚𝑖𝑗 ) denote confusion
matrix, in which 𝑚𝑖𝑗 represents number of data points in the
intersection of subspace clusters 𝐶𝑖 and 𝐶𝑗 ; we can represent
𝑚𝑖𝑗 as
󵄨
󵄨
𝑚𝑖𝑗 = 󵄨󵄨󵄨󵄨sup (𝐶𝑖 ) ∪ sup (𝐶𝑗 )󵄨󵄨󵄨󵄨 .
(12)
We use the Hungarian method [51] to find a permutation
of the cluster labels such that the sum of the diagonal elements
of M is maximized. 𝐷max denotes this maximized sum. The
clustering error (CE) distance for subspace clustering is given
by
CE (GS, RS) =
|𝑈| − 𝐷max
.
|𝑈|
(13)
The value of custer error (CE) is always between 0 and 1.
The more similar the two partitions RS and GS, the smaller
the CE value.
4.2. Data Sets
4.2.1. Synthetic Data Sets. The synthetic data sets were generated by data generator [23]. It permits controlling the size and
structure of the generated data sets through parameters such
as number and dimensionality of subspace clusters, dimensionality of the feature space, and density parameters for the
whole data set as well as for each cluster. The parameters used
in the synthetic data generation are the size of the data set
n, the number of clusters 𝑁𝑐 , the data set dimensionality d,
the average cluster dimensionality 𝑑avg , the domain of the
values of each dimension [minj , maxj ], the standard deviation
value range [sdmin , sdmax ], which is related to the distribution
of points in each cluster, and the outlier percentage. Using
these parameters, the data generator proceeds by defining
seed points among which the clusters will be distributed, as
well as the dimensions associated with each such seed point
[23]. Then, it determines how many points will be associated
with each cluster and finally it generates the cluster points.
Projected values of cluster points are generated according to
the normal distribution in their relevant dimension, with the
mean randomly chosen from [minj , maxj ] and the standard
deviation value from [sdvmin , sdvmax ]. The experiments were
analyzed by using 10 data sets with 𝑛 = 1000 to 50000,
number of dimensions d = 20 to 250, minj = −100, and maxj
= 100. The values of sdmin and sdmax were set to 1 percent
and 5 percent of the standard deviation on that dimension,
respectively.
4.2.2. Real Data Sets. We also tested our proposed algorithm
on the breast cancer, the mushroom data sets, and multiple features data (MF). All three data sets are available
from the UCI machine learning repository [http://archive.
ics.uci.edu/ml/]. The cancer data set contains 569 instances
with 30 features. The mushroom data set contains 8124
instances and 22 attributes. The multiple features data (MF)
consists of features of handwritten numerals (“0”–“9”)
extracted from a collection of Dutch utility maps. Two hundred patterns per cluster (for a total of 2,000 patterns) have
been digitized in binary images. These digits are represented
in terms of the following six feature sets (files):
(1) mfeat-fou: 76 Fourier coefficients of the character
shapes;
(2) mfeat-fac: 216 profile correlations;
(3) mfeat-kar: 64 Karhunen-Love coefficients;
(4) mfeat-pix: 240 pixel averages in 2 × 3 windows;
(5) mfeat-zer: 47 Zernike moments;
(6) mfeat-mor: 6 morphological features.
For experimental results we used five feature sets (mfeatfou, mfeat-fac, mfeat-kar, mfeat-zer, and mfeat-mor). All the
values in each feature were standardized to mean 0 and
variance 1.
4.3. MOSCL Results Analysis. The scalability of MOSCL with
increasing data set size and dimensionality are discussed in
this section. In all of the following experiments, the performance of the results returned by MOSCL is better in comparison with PROCLUS.
4.3.1. Scalability with the Data Set Size. The scalability of
MOSCL with the size of the data set is depicted in Figure 2.
The results for scaling by the data size n verify that the algorithm is approximately linear in n. The experiments were
obtained by using data set varying the number of data points
Applied Computational Intelligence and Soft Computing
10000
9000
8000
7000
Time (s)
from 1000 of 50000. The dimensionality value of the data set
is set to 20. The data points were grouped in 5 clusters with 10
percentages of data points generated as outliers. For this set
of experiments, the distributions of points for the bounded
dimensions of all clusters follow a uniform distribution.
MOSCL successfully locates all input clusters within the
course of 40 generations, on average. The execution time of
MOSCL is comparable to that of PROCLUS [23]. The slight
nonlinearity comes from the final stage of extracting the
points from the clustered dimensions.
9
6000
5000
4000
3000
2000
1000
0
0
1000
5000
50000
25000
Date set size
Figure 2: Scalability with the size of the data set.
2000
1750
1500
Time (s)
4.3.2. Scalability with Dimensionality of the Data Set. Figure 3
shows the scalability of MOSCL as the dimensionality of the
data set increases from 50 to 250. In this series of experiments, each dataset has 5000 data points and there are 5
clusters being embedded in some 5-dimensional subspace.
Additionally, as the data dimensionality increases, the application of the genetic operators becomes increasingly more
expensive mainly due to the increasing number of constraintchecking computations which require yielding individuals
without overlapping candidate solutions. As in the scalability
experiments with the dimensionality of data set, the execution of MOSCL is usually better than that of PROCLUS [23].
The result shows a linear increase of runtime when increasing
the dimensionality of the data set.
1250
1000
750
500
4.3.3. Scalability with Average Cluster Dimensionality. Figure 4 shows the dependency of the execution time on the
average cluster dimensionality where the latter increases from
10 to 50 in a 100-dimensional data space. In each case, the
dataset has 50000 points distributed over 5 clusters with a
fixed 10 percent level of outliers. The superlinear speedup
in the execution time with the dimensionality of the hidden
clusters is explained as follows: the higher the dimensionality
of the hidden clusters is, the more likely it is for the evolutionary search operators to produce chromosomes along the
bounded dimensions. It required extra operations to obtain
a feasible chromosome. Additionally, as the dimensionality
of hidden clusters increases, more space becomes available
for the mutation and crossover operators. The higher average
cluster dimensionality increased the computational overhead
by genetic operators.
The scalability experiments show that MOSCL scales well
also for large and high-dimensional data sets.
suggest that the moderate number of dimensions of this data
does not have a major impact on algorithms that consider
all dimensions in the clustering process. MOSCL is executed
for a total of 50 generations. The experimental results show
the superiority of MOSCL algorithm in comparison to
PROCLUS. The proposed algorithm MOSCL detects high
quality subspace clusters on all real data sets but PROCLUS
is unable to detect them. The accuracy results of the real data
sets are presented in Table 3.
4.3.4. Results on Real Data Sets. The quality of the clustering result is evaluated in terms of accuracy. The accuracy
achieved by the PROCLUS algorithm on breast cancer data
is 71.0 percent, which is less than 94.5 percent achieved by
MOSCL clustering algorithm. The enhanced performance
given by MOSCL in comparison with that of the PROCLUS
suggests that some dimensions are likely not relevant to some
clusters in this data. The accuracy achieved by MOSCL on
mushroom data set is 93.6 percent, which is greater than
the accuracy (84.5 percent) achieved by PROCLUS on the
same data. PROCLUS and MOSCL are used to cluster the
MF data. The accuracy achieved by these algorithms on this
data is 94.5 percent and 83.5 percent, respectively. Such results
4.3.5. Performance Measure of Clustering Results. We have
computed the CE distance for all clustering results using the
subspace clustering CE distance. MOSCL is able to achieve
highly accurate results and its performance is generally
consistent. As we can see from Figure 5, MOSCL is more
robust to cluster dimensionality than the PROCLUS algorithm. The experiments show that our algorithm is able to
detect clusters and their relevant dimensions accurately in
various situations. MOSCL successfully avoids the selection
of irrelevant dimensions in all the data sets used in these
experiments. The results of PROCLUS are less accurate than
those given by MOSCL. When data sets contain projected
clusters of low dimensionality, PROCLUS performs poorly.
250
0
0
50
100
150
Date set dimensionality
200
250
Figure 3: Scalability with the dimensionality of the data set.
10
Applied Computational Intelligence and Soft Computing
on large and high dimensional synthetic and real world data
sets show that MOSCL outperforms subspace clustering as
PROCLUS by orders of magnitude. Moreover, our algorithm
yields accurate results when handling data with outliers.
There are still many obvious directions to be explored in the
future. The interesting behavior of MOSCL on generated data
sets with low dimensionality suggests that our approach can
be used to extract useful information from gene expression
data that usually have a high level of background noise.
Another interesting direction to explore is to extend the scope
of preprocessing phase of MOSCL from attribute relevance
analysis to attribute relevance.
4000
3500
Time (s)
3000
2500
2000
1500
1000
500
0
0
10
20
30
40
50
Average dimensionality of clusters
References
Figure 4: Scalability with average dimensionality of clusters.
1.0
0.9
CE distance
0.8
0.7
0.6
0.5
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
0.0
5.0
10.0
15.0
20.0
25.0
30.0
35.0
Subspace cluster dimensionality
PROCLUS
MOSCL
Figure 5: Distances between MOSCL output and the true clustering.
Table 3: Average accuracy results on real data sets.
Data set
Cancer
Mushroom
Multiple features
PROCLUS
71.5
84.5
83.5
MOSCL
94.5
93.6
94.5
5. Conclusion
In this paper we have presented a robust MOSCL (multiobjective subspace clustering) algorithm for the challenging
problem of high-dimensional clustering and illustrated the
suitability of our algorithm in tests and comparisons with
previous work. The first phase of MOSCL performs subspace
relevance analysis by detecting dense and sparse regions and
their locations in data set. After detection of dense regions
it eliminates outliers. MOSCL discovers subspaces in dense
regions of data set and produces subspace clusters. The
discussion details key aspects of the proposed methodology,
MOSCL, including representation scheme, maximization fitness functions, and novel genetic operators. Our experiments
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